tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.comments2018-05-22T18:08:15.336+02:00ObservingGreecekleinguthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12491174042954678023noreply@blogger.comBlogger10543125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-89550672818418395062018-05-22T15:01:59.362+02:002018-05-22T15:01:59.362+02:00After I read the article (whose author answers to ...After I read the article (whose author answers to the typical german name of Zacharias Zacharakis) I decided to address Dean in future only as Comical Dean. If the article promotes anything remotely anti-greek it might be the idea that it would be helpful for Greece and Europe if the Chinese would not only run the port of Piraeus but the whole country - an idea btw. that I dared to put in the comments section of the Guardian 4 years ago. <br />UrsAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-91286016898665921742018-05-19T21:01:05.889+02:002018-05-19T21:01:05.889+02:00Nice post. I learn something new and challenging o...Nice post. I learn something new and challenging on blogs I stumbleupon every day.<br />It&#39;s alwys helpful to read articles from other authors and use <br />something from other sites.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-88291817592056929602018-05-19T20:44:48.103+02:002018-05-19T20:44:48.103+02:00I was extremely pleased to uncover this web site. ...I was extremely pleased to uncover this web site. I wanted to <br />thank you for ones time due to this fantastic read!!<br />I definitely savored every bit of it and I have you saved as a favorite to see new information in your <br />web site.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-74552729802587848992018-05-19T17:56:24.734+02:002018-05-19T17:56:24.734+02:00Wonderful items from you, man. I&#39;ve keep in mi...Wonderful items from you, man. I&#39;ve keep in minhd <br />your stuff previous to and you are simply extremely great.<br />I really like what you have bought here, really like what <br />you&#39;re stating and the wayy in which wherein you saay it.<br />You&#39;re making it enjoyable and you continue to care for to stay it sensible.<br />I can not wait to learn far more from you. That is <br />really a great web site.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-18519132658237240372018-05-19T17:52:09.567+02:002018-05-19T17:52:09.567+02:00Asking questions are truly good thing iif you are ...Asking questions are truly good thing iif you are not understanding <br />anything fully, except this paragraph presents nice understanding yet.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-47888214417496803462018-05-15T16:42:52.135+02:002018-05-15T16:42:52.135+02:00LeaNder:
Please engage in better research so that...LeaNder:<br /><br />Please engage in better research so that you are better informed:<br /><br />https://www.history.com/news/greeks-may-have-influenced-chinas-terra-cotta-armyAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-75986920329019454322018-05-14T22:27:48.910+02:002018-05-14T22:27:48.910+02:00LeaNder:
Are you sure you don&#39;t need private ...LeaNder:<br /><br />Are you sure you don&#39;t need private lesson in catching up with generally accepted news (we are not talking accounting here but the real world):<br /><br />https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/china-terracotta-army-ancient-greek-sculptors-alexander-the-great-marco-polo-a7357606.html<br /><br />D.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-1490723504785240882018-05-14T15:44:19.947+02:002018-05-14T15:44:19.947+02:00I have no ethnically classifiable enemies. Why sho...I have no ethnically classifiable enemies. Why should I have a problem with China outselling Germany? I should have? You do not seriously expect German pride from me?<br /><br />Your aside, though: that ultimately China may well have been inspired as shown by the terracotta army by Greece wisdom is highly interesting. I guess the European DNA found will soon be thoroughly clarified as distinctively Greek. ... Vaguely reminds me of a paper I had to write on the history of writing in linguistics with a US scholar in linguistics. ...<br /><br />******<br /><i>So, in your German mind, the Persian empire, a despotic construct,</i><br /><br />The &quot;neo-Persian empire&quot;, spreading its sleazy fingers beyond its present land? I wish I was as sure as you it can be reduced to &quot;despotic construct&quot; over the centuries, millennia. It surely can be kept out of the larger silk-road land vs sea project artificially. We&#39;ll see. Clever to have a plan B though.<br /><br />******<br />Was interesting to look into your &quot;venom&quot; mirror.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-74388726855218308892018-05-13T17:26:28.119+02:002018-05-13T17:26:28.119+02:00Αντε χάσου. Ενας τυπικός Έλληνας ηλίθιος που δεν σ...Αντε χάσου. Ενας τυπικός Έλληνας ηλίθιος που δεν συνεισφέρει τίποτα και πιστεύει ότι ξέρει τα πάντα. Η Τουρκία θα ήταν ένα ωραίο μέρος για να διευρύνετε τους ορίζοντές σας.<br /><br />Anonymos.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-24742967333325165672018-05-13T11:41:36.924+02:002018-05-13T11:41:36.924+02:00LeaNder:
I am not sure how much of history you an...LeaNder:<br /><br />I am not sure how much of history you and your fellow Germans know, but when your Der Zeit journalists think &quot;ironic&quot; that the Greeks who in the Battle of Salamina defeated the &quot;far superior&quot; Persian Navy are now defeated by the East by other means, I find such statement both oozing with venom, German jealousy for obviously lacking such glorious achievements and a disturbing ignorance regarding civilizations.<br /><br />So, in your German mind, the Persian empire, a despotic construct, and China with a deeply refined civilization inspired by the Greeks (see terracotta warriors) are the same thing and both represent the East? Jesus Christ, people! Are you that ignorant? And apart from your ignorance, you want to stick it to the Greeks by inferring that the excellent SinoGreek cooperation and pure admiration of two of the oldest human civilizations is somehow another defeat for the Greeks because now the East controls Piraeus? This is the most moronic thing one could invent. China is welcomed in Greece with open arms. I wish I could make the same statement about Germany but I think you very well know that not only Germany is devoid of civilization certificates of any kind but is now despised in the whole of Greece and as far as I can deduce for very good reasons.<br /><br />Furthermore, when the same German article rings the alarm bell that the port of Hamburg will be overtaken by Piraeus you don&#39;t see venom oozing again?<br /><br />And when Berlin says that Germany Inc. is not for sale to China, aren&#39;t you trying to project your own animosities against a country, China, which clearly outsells you in trade (imagine that; China beating Germany in an uninterrupted way over the years and in an undisputed manner) and which China poses an existential threat to your pattern of exporting deflation around the world?<br /><br />By the way, isn&#39;t oozing venom when you ignore the vastly superior Greek technology in military shipbuilding to the number of Persian ships and calling the Persian fleet &quot;vastly superior&quot;? How could the Persian fleet be vastly superior when a Greek trireme vessel was worth twenty of the Persian ships? But of course none of this matter to you and your fellow Germans. All you want to observe of a situation that clearly speaks of another humiliation of Germany by China in trade matters is that the losers are the Greeks instead who this time are conquered by the East. Talking about German propaganda with a deep inferiority complex.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-7438293020565342462018-05-12T19:15:38.277+02:002018-05-12T19:15:38.277+02:00Btw, you can see German venom oozing in this arti...<i>Btw, you can see German venom oozing in this article</i><br /><br />you can help me out Dean, I am sure. Directing my attention on the precise &quot;venom oozing&quot; passages?<br /><br />Just in case I may not understand while following your lead<br /><br />LeaNderAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-14118347367736731962018-05-12T18:25:00.146+02:002018-05-12T18:25:00.146+02:00Καραγιάννη,
Άσε τα &quot;σάπια&quot; του τύπου: &...Καραγιάννη, <br />Άσε τα &quot;σάπια&quot; του τύπου: &quot;...δεν αίμαστε πραγματικοί Έλληνες, οι άλλοι εκτός από σένα...&quot; κλπ.<br /><br />Για να ξελαμπικάρεις, σου οφείλω δύο απαντήσεις στην ελληνική γλώσσα, την οποία θεωρώ ότι ομιλείς, καθόσον μάλιστα δεν ενδιαφέρουν κανέναν άλλον εδώ μέσα...<br />1. Το 10ράκι το πήρες για το σχόλιο που έκανες επί της ανάρτησης.<br />2. Την κακή κριτική την πήρες για να προσέχεις στο μέλλον, εκεί στα fora που συμμετέχεις, είτε με δαπάνες του Δημοσίου είτε με δικά σου έξοδα, κάθε φορά που συναγελάζεσαιμε Σκοπιανούς και τους βλέπεις να σηκώνουν στα τραπεζάκια τους ταμπελάκια με τον τίτλο: &quot;Republic of Macedonia&quot;, (δηλ. ΣΚΕΤΟ, χωρίς το F.Y.), να αντιδράς και να μην το &quot;καταπίνεις έτσι αμάσητο&quot;!<br />Τουλάχιστον ΟΧΙ πριν το αποφασίσει η κυβέρνηση της χώρας, όπου ανήκει ο φορέας τον οποίον εκπροσωπείς στα fora αυτά!<br />Γκέγκε?<br />Γιατί η ενδοτικότητα ορισμένων, έχει δημιουργήσει de facto καταστάσεις, συχνά μειώνοντας την διαπραγματευτική ισχύ του Υπ. Εξ και γενικότερα της χώρας στη νέα κατάσταση και στο νέο Status Quo!<br />Αλλοιώς εσύ ΔΕΝ είσαι πραγματικός Έλληνας!<br />Ξανά-Γκέγκε?<br /><br />Υ.Γ. Άλλη φορά να έχεις το θάρρος της γνώμης σου και να υπογράφεις τα σχόλιά σου, χωρίς να επιλέγεις την ανωνυμία!Stavros Kyriazishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16049843199985216062noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-67428342765099148732018-05-12T15:36:08.462+02:002018-05-12T15:36:08.462+02:00To show you how confused you are:
Both of the com...To show you how confused you are:<br /><br />Both of the comments are mine. On one you give me a Perfect 10 and thank you for it because I deserve it :). On the second you make the accusation that I am from FYROM. Why this demonstrable modern Greek trait to exist in a constant state of confusion? Why this propensity to call the white, black and the black, white? I think I know why. Modern Greeks are people with a defeated mentality, unable to do what is right, always eager to follow easy paths mixed with a disturbing ideology of like 2 centuries ago. You are not going to go anywhere with this attitude. Not only you seem to want to transform your problems into someone&#39;s else prroblems but you are a victim of foreign influences and unending idiocies as to the true cause of your problems which is YOU. YOU and every other tormented soul who wants to pass as a Greek. You are not true Greeks. Greeks are people of science and reason. You have become so second rate balkan creatures full of emotions and ideological biases which are designed to keep you a perpetual slave. Slaves don&#39;t have opinions. Slaves are supposed to zip their mouths and do whatever their owners command. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-25117552050617042352018-05-11T18:55:26.268+02:002018-05-11T18:55:26.268+02:00Amount paid by Germany
The precise figure Germany...Amount paid by Germany<br /><br />The precise figure Germany paid is a matter of dispute. The German Government estimated it had paid the equivalent of 67.8 billion gold marks in reparations. The German figure included—other than gold or goods in kind—the scuttling of the interned German fleet at Scapa Flow, state property lost in lands ceded to other countries, and the loss of colonial territories. The Reparation Commission and the Bank for International Settlements state that 20.598 billion gold marks was paid by Germany in reparations, of which 7.595 billion was paid before the implementation of the London Schedule of Payments. Niall Ferguson provides a slightly lower figure. He estimates that Germany paid no more than 19 billion gold marks. Ferguson further estimates that this sum amounted to 2.4 per cent of Germany&#39;s national income between 1919 and 1932. Stephen Schuker, in his definitive econometric study (1988, pp. 106–19), concedes that Germany transferred 16.8 billion marks over the whole period, but points out that this sum was vastly offset by the devaluation of Allied paper-mark deposits up to 1923, and by loans that Germany subsequently repudiated after 1924. The net capital transfer into Germany amounted to 17.75 billion marks, or 2.1% of Germany&#39;s entire national income over the period 1919–1931. In effect, therefore, America paid reparations to Germany—four times more, in price-adjusted terms, than the U.S. furnished to West Germany under the post-1948 Marshall Plan. According to Gerhard Weinberg, reparations were paid, towns were rebuilt, orchards replanted, mines reopened and pensions paid. However, the burden of repairs was shifted away from the German economy and onto the damaged economies of the war&#39;s victors.<br /><br />Loan payments<br /><br />To help make reparations payments, Germany took out various loans during the 1920s. In 1933, following the cancellation of reparations, the new German Chancellor Adolf Hitler cancelled all payments. In June 1953, an agreement on this existing debt was reached with West Germany, which agreed to make symbolic token payments against the loans that had been defaulted on in the 1920s, but deferred some of the debt until West and East Germany were unified. In 1995, following reunification, Germany began making the final payments towards the loans. A final installment of US$94 million was made on 3 October 2010, settling German loan debts in regard to reparations.Stavros Kyriazishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16049843199985216062noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-44844273534220390162018-05-11T18:49:50.803+02:002018-05-11T18:49:50.803+02:00London Schedule of Payments
The London Schedule o...London Schedule of Payments<br /><br />The London Schedule of Payments of 5 May 1921 established &quot;the full liability of all the Central Powers combined, not just Germany alone,&quot; at 132 billion gold marks. This sum was a compromise promoted by Belgium—against higher figures demanded by the French and Italians and the lower figure the British supported—that &quot;represented an assessment of the lowest amount that public opinion ... would tolerate&quot;.<br /><br />This figure was divided into three series of bonds: &quot;A&quot; and &quot;B&quot; Bonds together had a nominal value of 50 billion gold marks (US$12.5 billion)—less than the sum Germany had previously offered to pay. &quot;C&quot; Bonds, comprising the remainder of the reparation figure, &quot;were deliberately designed to be chimerical.&quot; They were &quot;a political bargaining chip&quot; that served the domestic policies of France and the United Kingdom. The figure was completely unreal; its primary function was to mislead public opinion &quot;into believing that the 132-billion-mark figure was being maintained&quot;. Furthermore, &quot;Allied experts knew that Germany could not pay 132 billion marks and that the other Central Powers could pay little. Thus, the A and B Bonds, which were genuine, represented the actual Allied assessment of German capacity to pay.&quot; Taking into account the sum already paid between 1919 and 1921, Germany&#39;s immediate obligation was 41 billion gold marks.<br /><br />To pay towards this sum, Germany could pay in kind or in cash. Commodities paid in kind included coal, timber, chemical dyes, pharmaceuticals, livestock, agricultural machines, construction materials, and factory machinery. The gold value of these would be deducted from what Germany was required to pay. Germany&#39;s assistance with the restoration of the university library of Louvain, which was destroyed by the Germans on 25 August 1914, was also credited towards the sum, as were some of the territorial changes the treaty imposed upon Germany. The payment schedule required US$250 million within twenty-five days and then US$500 million annually, plus 26 per cent of the value of German exports. The German Government was to issue bonds at five per cent interest and set up a sinking fund of one per cent to support the payment of reparations. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_I_reparationsStavros Kyriazishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16049843199985216062noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-6905957476490561342018-05-11T18:48:29.216+02:002018-05-11T18:48:29.216+02:00The Treaty of Versailles (signed in 1919) and the ...The Treaty of Versailles (signed in 1919) and the 1921 London Schedule of Payments required Germany to pay 132 billion gold marks (US$33 billion) in reparations to cover civilian damage caused during the war. This figure was divided into three categories of bonds: A, B, and C. Of these, Germany was required to pay towards &#39;A&#39; and &#39;B&#39; bonds totaling 50 billion marks (US$12.5 billion) unconditionally. The payment of the remaining &#39;C&#39; bonds was interest free and contingent on the Weimar Republic&#39;s ability to pay, as was to be assessed by an Allied committee. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_I_reparationsStavros Kyriazishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16049843199985216062noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-15103313097409034762018-05-11T18:44:36.221+02:002018-05-11T18:44:36.221+02:00&quot;...Perhaps the most innovative feature of th...&quot;...Perhaps the most innovative feature of the London agreement was a clause that said West Germany should only pay for debts out of its trade surplus, and any repayments were limited to 3% of exports earnings every year. This meant those countries that were owed debt had to buy West German exports in order to be paid. It meant West Germany would only pay from genuine earnings, without recourse to new loans. And it meant Germany&#39;s creditors had an interest in the country growing and its economy thriving. <br />Following the London deal, West Germany experienced an &quot;economic miracle&quot;, with the debt problem resolved and years of economic growth. The medicine doled out to heavily indebted countries over the last 30 years could not be more different. Instead, the practice since the early 1980s has been to bail out reckless lenders through giving new loans, while forcing governments to implement austerity and free-market liberalisation to become &quot;more competitive&quot;.<br /><br />As a result of this, from Latin America and Africa in the 80s and 90s to Greece, Ireland and Spain today, poverty has increased and inequality soared. In Africa in the 80s and 90s, the number of people living in extreme poverty increased by 125 million, while economies shrank. In Greece today, the economy has shrunk by more than 20%, while one in two young people are unemployed. In both cases, debt ballooned.<br /><br />The priority of an indebted government today is to repay its debts, whatever the amount of the budget these repayments consume. In contrast to the 3% limit on German debt payments, today the IMF and World Bank regard debt payments of up to 15-25% of export revenues as being &quot;sustainable&quot; for impoverished countries. The Greek government&#39;s foreign debt payments are around 30% of exports.<br /><br />When debts have been &quot;restructured&quot;, they are only a portion of the total debts owed, with only willing creditors participating. In 2012, only Greece&#39;s private creditors had debt reduced. Creditors that held British or Swiss law debt were also able to &quot;hold out&quot; against the restructuring, and will doubtless pursue Greece for many years to come.<br /><br />The &quot;strategy&quot; in Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain today is to put the burden of adjustment solely on the debtor country to make its economy more competitive through mass unemployment and wage cuts. But without creditors like Germany willing to buy more of their exports, this will not happen, bringing pain without end.<br /><br />The German debt deal was a key element of recovering from the devastation of the second world war. In Europe today, debt is tearing up the social fabric. Outside Europe, heavily indebted countries are still treated to a package of austerity and &quot;restructuring&quot; measures. Pakistan, the Philippines, El Salvador and Jamaica are all spending between 10 and 20% of export revenues on government foreign debt payments, and this doesn&#39;t include debt payments by the private sector.<br /><br />If we had no evidence of how to solve a debt crisis equitably, we could perhaps regard the policies of Europe&#39;s leaders as misguided. But we have the positive example of Germany 60 years ago, and the devastating example of the Latin American debt crisis 30 years ago. The actions of Europe&#39;s leaders are nothing short of criminal...&quot; https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/feb/27/greece-spain-helped-germany-recoverStavros Kyriazishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16049843199985216062noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-23120496378987037002018-05-11T18:21:49.644+02:002018-05-11T18:21:49.644+02:00Πρόσεχες τις παρέες σου, εκεί που πήγες? Πολλούς &...Πρόσεχες τις παρέες σου, εκεί που πήγες? Πολλούς &quot;Republic of Macedonia&quot;(ΣΚΕΤΟ!)βλέπω ανάμεσα στους συμμετέχοντες! https://www.tentdays.eu/2018/assets/doc/list_pax.pdfStavros Kyriazishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16049843199985216062noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-42381043359651633282018-05-11T18:09:22.422+02:002018-05-11T18:09:22.422+02:00Perfect 10!Perfect 10!Stavros Kyriazishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16049843199985216062noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-58580619536417924212018-05-11T12:37:41.427+02:002018-05-11T12:37:41.427+02:00Btw, you can see German venom oozing in this artic...Btw, you can see German venom oozing in this article about Piraeus. No, no people. Piraeus is not a success story according to the Germans. Piraeus is now &quot;Chinas Anker in Europa&quot;. A direct threat to the 4th Reich. Time to go to war in the defense of der Vateland. <br /><br />https://www.zeit.de/wirtschaft/2018-04/neue-seidenstrasse-china-griechenland-europa-containerhafen-piraeus<br /><br />Dean.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-62406198422767596392018-05-11T12:11:19.472+02:002018-05-11T12:11:19.472+02:00And as successful and dynamic the Piraeus port has...And as successful and dynamic the Piraeus port has become, under Chinese investment and management, it is now exposing the duplicitous nature and hypocrisy of the Germans who are throwing everything and the kitchen sink to stop its growth because of the deadly threat Chinese competition poses on them.<br /><br />If you read between the lines, the Germans now want Piraeus dead because Piraeus - if it continues its unimpeded growth will overtake German ports and has now become an existential threat to the Germans. Which brings me to my point, made several times and repeatedly here on this blog, that Germany is a frenemy state to Greece - a state pretending to be a Trojan horse friend but in reality a true enemy.<br /><br />I guarantee you that from now on we will hear many stories about &quot;violations&quot; of &quot;EU law&quot; at the port and all sorts of legal challenges designed to slow things down because Piraeus is getting into a serious position of breaking the German monopoly distribution routes in Europe.<br /><br />http://www.ypodomes.com/index.php/limania-aerodromia/limania-marines/item/46741-die-zeit-to-taxytera-anaptyssomeno-limani-pagkosmios-o-peiraias<br /><br />Dean.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-2001696872820968032018-05-11T11:56:33.295+02:002018-05-11T11:56:33.295+02:00The Piraeus port needs now rail connections. One d...The Piraeus port needs now rail connections. One direct rail connection from the Venizelos airport to the port which will be vital for homeporting and the cruising component as well as various rail link-ups for the logistic park areas near the port and beyond. The true value of the port is that is now spawning a brand new dynamic sector for the Greek economy in logistics.<br /><br />DeanAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-21006621040583669502018-05-11T10:06:53.407+02:002018-05-11T10:06:53.407+02:00And the 2 hotels are going to be a megalo hit. The...And the 2 hotels are going to be a megalo hit. They will be build at the finger that protrude out in the harbor southwest of Gate E2. On one side they will have a view of a small dry-dock that is still in use, on the other side they will look across the harbor at the cruise terminal with the ships. There are big and small ferries passing in and out all the time. It is every cruise passengers romantic dream of shipping and Piraeus.<br />Of cause there is resistance and obstructions to the building of the hotels from the local competition, they have tried to have the warehouses declared of archaeological value. I pass them twice a day, they are as ugly as warehouses come, concrete, most likely build around 1935, covered in graffiti. Well the Chinese are patient people, they will get their hotels eventually, and it will be a blessing for Piraeus.<br />The COSCO venture would be perfect if the port had better direct rail connection to central Europe. The container terminals are in the middle of the city and the trucks are a pain and the cause of frequent congestions, they are also a soft spot inasmuch as they are prone to strikes. We shall see if the Chinese overcome that problem as well, or if Thessaloniki takes some of the wind out of their sails. <br />Lennard.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-45920262600855035932018-05-10T17:12:44.641+02:002018-05-10T17:12:44.641+02:00Greece does not need any further German BS and unw...Greece does not need any further German BS and unwelcomed BS, I might add.<br /><br />All Greece needs is to faithfully execute tons of projects laying around and waiting to be executed:<br /><br />http://www.ypodomes.com/index.php/special-editions/news-in-english/item/46740-construction-works-for-2-new-piers-in-piraeus-and-thessaloniki-ports-to-exceed-300mln-euros-draft<br /><br />Dean.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5882645467378797266.post-19836662474355449462018-05-10T14:12:34.322+02:002018-05-10T14:12:34.322+02:00Nothing of German origin should ever be a model fo...Nothing of German origin should ever be a model for Greece. We are talking polar opposites here. Enough with &quot;German ideas&quot; about Greece. This is how &quot;Vavarokratia&quot; (The Bavarian rule period of incompetent Otto) started in Greece and created the clientellist state because the alient ruler could not connect with his subjects. German opinions stay in Germany. Leave Greece alone. You have no clue on how to manage Greece.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com